Gene-engineered T cells for cancer therapy

MH Kershaw, JA Westwood, PK Darcy - Nature Reviews Cancer, 2013 - nature.com
MH Kershaw, JA Westwood, PK Darcy
Nature Reviews Cancer, 2013nature.com
T cells have the capacity to eradicate diseased cells, but tumours present considerable
challenges that render T cells ineffectual. Cancer cells often make themselves
almost'invisible'to the immune system, and they sculpt a microenvironment that suppresses
T cell activity, survival and migration. Genetic engineering of T cells can be used
therapeutically to overcome these challenges. T cells can be taken from the blood of cancer
patients and then modified with genes encoding receptors that recognize cancer-specific …
Abstract
T cells have the capacity to eradicate diseased cells, but tumours present considerable challenges that render T cells ineffectual. Cancer cells often make themselves almost 'invisible' to the immune system, and they sculpt a microenvironment that suppresses T cell activity, survival and migration. Genetic engineering of T cells can be used therapeutically to overcome these challenges. T cells can be taken from the blood of cancer patients and then modified with genes encoding receptors that recognize cancer-specific antigens. Additional genes can be used to enable resistance to immunosuppression, to extend survival and to facilitate the penetration of engineered T cells into tumours. Using genetic modification, highly active, self-propagating 'slayers' of cancer cells can be generated.
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